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Loss of Pip4k2c confers liver-metastatic organotropism through insulin-dependent PI3K-AKT pathway activation.

Meri RogavaTyler J ApratiWei-Yu ChiJohannes C MelmsClemens HugStephanie H DavisEthan M EarlieCharlie ChungSachin K DeshmukhSharon WuGeorge SledgeStephen TangPatricia HoAmit Dipak AminLindsay CaprioCarino GurjaoSomnath TagoreBryan NgoMichael J LeeGiorgia ZanettiYiping WangSean ChenWilliam GeLuiza Martins Nascentes MeloGabriele AlliesJonas RöslerGoeffrey T GibneyOliver J SchmitzMegan SykesRémi J CreusotThomas TütingDirk SchadendorfMartin RöckenThomas K EigentlerAndrei MolotkovAkiva MintzSamuel F BakhoumSemir BeyazLewis C CantleyPeter Karl SorgerSven W MeckelmannAlpaslan TasdoganDavid R LiuAshley M LaughneyBenjamin Izar
Published in: Nature cancer (2024)
Liver metastasis (LM) confers poor survival and therapy resistance across cancer types, but the mechanisms of liver-metastatic organotropism remain unknown. Here, through in vivo CRISPR-Cas9 screens, we found that Pip4k2c loss conferred LM but had no impact on lung metastasis or primary tumor growth. Pip4k2c-deficient cells were hypersensitized to insulin-mediated PI3K/AKT signaling and exploited the insulin-rich liver milieu for organ-specific metastasis. We observed concordant changes in PIP4K2C expression and distinct metabolic changes in 3,511 patient melanomas, including primary tumors, LMs and lung metastases. We found that systemic PI3K inhibition exacerbated LM burden in mice injected with Pip4k2c-deficient cancer cells through host-mediated increase in hepatic insulin levels; however, this circuit could be broken by concurrent administration of an SGLT2 inhibitor or feeding of a ketogenic diet. Thus, this work demonstrates a rare example of metastatic organotropism through co-optation of physiological metabolic cues and proposes therapeutic avenues to counteract these mechanisms.
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